Meta's Mark Zuckerberg announced the end of fact-checking on his social media platforms. Industry watchers say it's another sign Silicon Valley is trying to get in President-elect Trump's good graces.
Meta's Mark Zuckerberg announced Facebook and Instagram would drop fact-checking. NPR talks with Steven Brill of NewsGuard, where journalists rate the reliability of news sources, about the move.
Available weekdays at 6:30 a.m. ET, with hosts Leila Fadel, Steve Inskeep, Michel Martin and A Martinez. Also available on Saturdays at 9 a.m. ET, with Ayesha Rascoe and Scott Simon. On Sundays ...
Steve Bannon, a former adviser to President-elect Trump, went after Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a Monday episode of his “Bannon’s War Room” podcast. “Zuckerberg can’t be trusted ...
Jan. 13—Washington Secretary of State Steve Hobbs is urging voters to rely on official election sources after Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, recently announced it will no ...
In the opinion of the CEO of Meta, the company has not been creating anything interesting for a long time and is just resting on the laurels of its founder: “They haven’t invented anything great for a long time. It was Steve Jobs who invented the ...
"We have to get people to assess and take on the risks themselves," Johnson told NPR's Steve Inskeep. "I think what has happened over the decades here with federal disaster relief is that more and ...
Meta is planning to cut 5% of staff with a focus on its lowest performers, Business Insider has learned. Mark Zuckerberg told employees he "decided to raise the bar on performance management" and ...
Mark Lemley, a Stanford law professor and lawyer who represented Meta in a 2023 AI copyright case, said he has dropped the company as a client because of what he described as CEO Mark Zuckerberg's ...
Meta plans to cut 5% of its workforce, or about 3,600 workers, with the social media giant focusing on eliminating low-performing employees. The layoffs, earlier reported by Bloomberg News, were ...
Facebook parent Meta on Tuesday announced that it's planning to cut back its workforce with the reductions focused on the lowest performers, according to an internal memo sent to Meta employees.
Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Meta, announced sweeping changes last week to the company’s approach to disinformation and hate speech. Its fact-checkers, Zuckerberg claimed ...